Funding may be roadblock to

Cuts alone wont be enough to fund $32 million a year

It seems hardly fair to ask new businesses to locate and invest in Springfield
if Springfield isn’t willing to invest in itself.

That’s the advice Jim Roth, a member of the Greater Springfield Chamber of Commerce’s Quantum Growth Partnership, gave residents last week during a public hearing
on infrastructure needs.

“A community that’s willing to keep its infrastructure where it needs to be is going to be more
attractive to the private developer or business,” Roth said.

Springfield faces the same dilemma as other cities around the country — the cost of material and labor increases, while funding decreases — but the capital city has exacerbated the situation by ignoring failed
infrastructure. Last spring the chamber group examined the city’s preservation, modernization and expansion needs, finding that Springfield
should spend $32 million annually on street and sidewalk repairs instead of the
$3.6 million it budgets.

Last week’s hearing, co-hosted by the chamber and a special subcommittee of the city
council, was the final in a series of four convened in different areas of the
city. Leaders met with residents at Lanphier High School to identify problem
spots and to garner funding suggestions for a comprehensive, five-year plan.

“This is a process — we’re taking it to the streets,” said Ward 4 Ald. Frank Lesko, who attended the meeting with Ald. Mark Mahoney,
Gail Simpson and Steve Dove. “It’s so we can go back and formulate what we need to do.”

John Keller, president of the Pillsbury Mills Neighborhood Association, told
leaders that the roads in his area have been paved over so many times that they
now sit higher than adjacent sidewalks. When it rains, he said, water floods
directly from the streets into residents’ yards.

Lincoln Park Neighborhood Association representatives spoke about their area’s disappearing sidewalks, while other attendees discussed the poor condition of
South Grand Avenue.

Residents spent a significant portion of the meeting brainstorming funding
solutions. Some suggested money-saving measures such as cracking down on city
employees who leave work trucks idling and cutting middle-management positions.

Others offered ideas for new revenue streams like implementing a conservation
pricing structure that channels extra money into city coffers by charging more
for water during summer months.

Steve Combs, president of the Enos Park Neighborhood Association, suggested
diverting a portion of collected fees from boarded-up houses to fund
improvements. The city charges $100 for the first six months a home is boarded
and $250 every three months thereafter. Combs, who previously criticized the
city for not aggressively collecting fees, said the dividend could add up
quickly. He has personally identified 400 dilapidated homes across the city, he
said.

Aldermen even discussed reinstituting the city residency requirement for police
and fire employees, so they could help pay the property taxes that fund their
pensions.

Leaders steered clear of openly suggesting tax increases, but hinted that the
issue would call for tough decisions. Mahoney, co-chair of the subcommittee,
said cuts can be made to Mayor Tim Davlin’s proposed $117 million budget, but the city must consider more funding options
to afford any significant improvements.

“The thing I want to point out is, even if you’ve cut to the bones, we’re still going to be short,” he explained. “We can’t cut [$32 million] out to pay for infrastructure.”

Now that the subcommittee has spoken with residents, Mahoney says, they’ll work with the public works department to develop a five-year plan that
outlines when and how improvements will be made. The plan will coincide with
the city’s fiscal year 2010 budget, which must be approved by March 1.